Water is a very common example. Many other substances like Mercury, organic compounds, bromine can do this same thing at easily attainable temperatures and pressures. Some like iron and nickel need very high temperatures to attain the gaseous state and some like hydrogen and helium need to reach almost absolute zero to become solids.
No, particles in a solid only vibrate, whereas particles in a liquid are free to move within the liquid.
The only solid that floats in its liquid is ice. This occurs because the density of ice is lower than the density of liquid water, allowing it to float on the surface.
earth is the only planet where the same substance can exist in gaseous , liquid , and solid form
No because Liquid C02 can only be in solid or gas form not Liquid due to the propeties of the element.
A snowman is a solid when it's done being built, and is a liquid when it melts away. The only time that it would turn gas was if you poured boiling water over it.
water
Solid liquid gas. A solid is hard like ice. A liquid is water. A gas is water just boiled.
Water
No there solid liquid and gas
It is a solid metal. Only two elements on the periodic table are liquid: mercury and bromine.
At room temperature and up to around 100o F, Vaseline is a semi-solid, or quasi-solid, which has characteristics of both a solid and a liquid. It melts at around 100o F, and behaves only as a liquid.
temperature. The higher the temperature of the liquid, the more of the solid you can dissolve in it.
No, particles in a solid only vibrate, whereas particles in a liquid are free to move within the liquid.
In our usual experience, we only find water in all three phases, as solid, liquid, and gas. But almost any substance can exist in those phases, given the right temperature and pressure.
The only solid that floats in its liquid is ice. This occurs because the density of ice is lower than the density of liquid water, allowing it to float on the surface.
Only Mercury occurs in nature as a liquid in its elemental state. Bromine is also a liquid element, but does not occur in its elemental form in nature.
Water is the only substance that commonly exists as a solid, liquid, and gas in Earth's atmosphere. Solid water is ice, liquid water is water, and gaseous water is water vapor.